Skip to main content

Home/ APEngLangper711-12/ Group items tagged As I Lay Dying

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Willie C

Themes of As I Lay Dying | Novel Summaries Analysis - 0 views

  • every character is essentially isolated from the others. Moreover, the characters in the novel do not communicate effectively with one another.
  • The absence of his mother’s love leads Darl to isolation not only from others but also from himself.
  •  
    This source discusses several themes of the novel, including isolation, death, sanity, and identity. Without the role of any decent parent, most of the children evolve into isolated, uncaring characters, who only seek their own self interests. This contrasts sharply with Jewel, who has a caring mother, and ends up sacrificing all that he cares about in order to respectfully (in his opinion) bury his mother.
  •  
    "Faulkner's use of multiple narrators underscores one of his primary themes: every character is essentially isolated from the others. Moreover, the characters in the novel do not communicate effectively with one another"
  •  
    This source outlines the themes in As I lay Dying, as well as giving examples. This quote provides an overview of Faulkner's style of using the different characters as narrators in order to further emphasize that the characters do not communicate well.
Emily S

The Function of Parting Ceremonies - 0 views

  •  
    Robert Sutton remarks that as time has progressed, dying ceremonies are not for the well-being of the deceased but as an emotional clutch for the loved ones of the deceased. What is ironic about As I Lay Dying is the family goes through all of the motions of the typical dying ceremony, yet they do not use each other in their grieving processes.
Emily S

The Voices in As I Lay Dying - 0 views

  •  
    This article explains the importance of the multiple narrators. Within each narrator lays a different perspective. And within each narrator, lays both a textual voice, unbiased and the voice of the author, and a mimetic voice that describes the feelings of the particular narrator.
Connor P

Gale Power Search - Document - 0 views

  • he uses Gothic imagery and atmosphere in particular to highlight this idea. Gothicism is also used in Faulkner's work to emphasize
  • distorted religious views, the clash between those with power and those without, the isolation of the individual, humans' powerlessness in an indifferent universe, the moral decay of the community, the burden of history, the horrors of humans' treatment of each other, and the problem of evil.
  •  
    This shows how Faulkner uses his Gothic elements to highlight his specific themes such as isolation. this is the main theme in As I Lay Dying, as it leads the the struggles in the family and their destruction
Sydney C

As I Lay Dying: Christian Lore and Irony - 0 views

  •  
    This article focuses on Faulkner's use of satire and biblical references in As I Lay Dying. His use of fire and water as disasters that the Bundrens must overcome recalls references of biblical stories.
  •  
    Another one that I can't copy quotes from, but it discusses religion and how it is used ironicly during the course of the Bundrens' lives
Sarah Sch

(1) "Great God, What They Got in That Wagon?": Grotesque Intrusions in As I Lay Dying - 0 views

  •  
    "In As I Lay Dying, Anse Bundren is a grotesque character partly because of his moral deformity: his lack of self-understanding, his parasitic and manipulative relations with others, his pious posturing."
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    "Incongruous events continually upset the decorum of death. "
  •  
    "Insofar as the journey seemed to be a collective effort courageously undertaken by the whole family for the whole, involving heroic suffering and heroic action, that perception is undermined by the sudden dismissal of Addie, the expulsion of Darl, and the scurrying aftermath of selfish pursuits."
  •  
    This article discusses the use of grotesque art in As I Lay Dying. Grotesque art is art with bad manners that challenges ideals and notions of proper order with dissonant elements. The article emphasizes the backwardness of the events of Addie's burial like the burying of a week old stinking corpse. The article also highlights the unusually motives each narrative maintains through their journey to bury Addie even though their sole concern should be about the burial of the matriarch of the family. This article would support an essay dwelling on the detachedness the Bundren family experiences.
Willie C

As I Lay Dying - 0 views

  •  
    "Absurdist comedy is juxtaposed with existential tragedy, complicating the reader's assessment of the Bundren family and the significance of their actions"
  •  
    This source is a literary criticism of the novel. It provides solid details to the black humor used in As I Lay Dying, and speaks more of the style of Faulkner's novel.
David D

What's in a Name? Etymology and As I Lay Dying - 1 views

  •  
    This article focuses on the etymology behind each name in As I Lay Dying. Darl is a darling, but his mother scorns his love, whereas Jewel is the most loved child in the family, even though he has an unkind personality. The names are highly sarcastic
Sarah Sch

(5) As I Lay Dying - 0 views

  •  
    "It gradually becomes clear that each member of the family has an ulterior, selfish motive for wanting to get to Jefferson."
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    "Darl's motives are perhaps the most difficult to discern, but it is clear that they involve escaping from the family altogether, particularly from Addie's influence: He purposely tries to lose Addie's coffin"
  •  
    "Irving Howe has pointed out that the novel's central theme is the tension between individual self-definition and the contingency of selfhood upon others, particularly parents and family."
  •  
    This article is a general overview of As I Lay Dying and the main theme of identity and identity within the family structure. Throughout As I Lay Dying, the selfish motives of each family monopolize the characters' attentions. The characters struggle to find their place within the family and how to communicate their feelings with each other. The most disturbing effect of this inability to form an identity results in the incarceration of Darl in a mental institution.
Evan G

Jewel Bundren in As I Lay Dying - 0 views

  • biologically, Jewel is not part of the Bundren household. Darl reminds us of as much by repeatedly describing him as pale, wooden, rigid, solid
  • ewel is a foreigner amongst family. And he knows it.
  •  
    This source discusses Jewel's isolation from his family (except his mother). Sort of like Victor's monster with humanity, Jewel knows he does not belong to his family, and as a result fails to get along with most of them. He constantly bickers and curses at his brothers, to the point of hating them, as well as Anse. However, like the monster, the only person whose affection he desires are his creator's, Addie's, which he does absolutely anything to obtain. He wants acceptance and approval from the only person he cares about.
Connor P

Literary Reference Center - powered by EBSCOhost: Fit and Surfeit in As I Lay Dying - 0 views

  • against the chapters as discrete units and against the isolation of individual consciousnesses that the chapter breaks reflect--in order to illuminate larger coherences born of the characters' multiple voices, but utterly inassimilable to them and unavailable to the characters themselves.
  •  
    This source is interesting as it comments that Faulkner uses the choppy breaking up of narrators to show the isolation of the family. as no member has consequtive chapters nor are the chapters intertwining view points
Willie C

William Faulkner's rural modernism - 0 views

  •  
    "Faulkner uses the experimental forms associated with modernism to depict the impact of the sociocultural era called modernity, and the processes of urbanization and industrialization known as modernization, on poor whites in the rural South. As I Lay Dying makes clear that Faulkner's rural modernism has not simply a geographic logic but also a sociopolitical significance. Rural modernism critiques the conflation of the urban and the modern, in part by revealing how the country is used as a foil against which urban modernity is defined"
  •  
    This source examines the novel from the perspective of modernism in Faulkner's writing. It discusses how it is used and how it effects other themes. This brings a new perspective to the groups of themes.
Sydney C

"As I Lay Dying" as Ironic Quest - 0 views

  •  
    I can't copy and paste direct quotes, but the article talks about the irony in the journey they are embarking on, including how the burial is being thought of as a "quest", while there is no ultimate prize nor joy in what they are doing.
Willie C

As I Lay Dying- Novels for Students - 0 views

  •  
    "The more sensitive characters, especially Addie and Darl, recognize their alienation from others. In particular, Addie is a striking example of someone who both longs to transcend this isolation and stubbornly works to maintain an impenetrable individuality"
  •  
    This source outlines the theme of isolation in the novel very well. It discusses the characters that recognize the isolation, as well as the isolation that is forced on them by Addie, who wants solitude.
Evan G

Addie Bundren in As I Lay Dying - 0 views

  • She worked as a schoolteacher and enjoyed whipping her students, whom she secretly hated. Oddly enough, what appealed to Addie most about this corporal punishment was the fact that it made her a part of the students’ lives. "Now you are aware of me!"
  • She wants to be noticed; she wants to be a real person. Having kids doesn’t solve the problem; it just presents a new one.
  •  
    Good source which discusses Addie Bunds and the entire theme of isolation; as a mother back in the day, childbirth is really her only appreciable quality. Her entire life, Addie just wants some recognition and companionship; Anse certainly neglects to fulfill the part of a decent husband, so she is left alone to die. Good site for the theme of isolation/alienation, especially by her own children.
Connor P

Literary Reference Center - powered by EBSCOhost: PERCEPTION AND THE DESTRUCTION OF BEI... - 2 views

  • With Cash, Darl believes that he shares a close affinity, as though he and Cash truly were one person. Addie's narration partially explains this curious affiliation, for she has lumped the boys together and disowned them both:
  •  
    This here shows the specfic isolation of Cash and Darl. Addie disowns them as she lumps them into the pre-Jewel children, and this isolation has different effects on both boys
Willie C

Raveling out like a looping string: As I Lay Dying and regenerative language - 0 views

  •  
    "perhaps because, for Addie, words are both the container and the contained; the empty vessel and the shape to fill that emptiness. They have the power to reveal and give form, as when she sees Anse flow out of the darkness and into the vessel of his name, but they also have the power to conceal"
  •  
    This source provides an overview of the novel based solely on the language usage of each narrator. It examines specific language like Addie's, that is empty and useless because that's how she feels life is.
Sydney C

Mythic Journey - 0 views

  •  
    once again I can't copy and paste (ugh) but 236 has a lot of good ones about Anse and Addie's character traits and Addie's "journey home"
Evan G

Darl in Faulkner's As I Lay Dying - 0 views

  •  
    This source compares Anse and Addie to Adam and Eve, and also explores the ideas that poor parenting leads to poor children behavior. Like Victor, Anse and Addie really don't fulfill the roles of decent father/mother figures. As a result, most of the children go astray (Vardaman is clueless and baffled, Darl starts to lose his grip, Dewey Dell is left pregnant and alone)
Sydney C

AS I LAY DYING: THE INSANE WORLD - 0 views

  •  
    focuses on darl and his role in AILD as well as his ability to oversee everything
1 - 20 of 53 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page